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HISTORY Low Mass originated in the early Middle Ages as a shortened or simplified form of Solemn Mass . Catholic practice had been that there was (at most) one Mass in a monastery or parish church each day. However, over time it became necessary for a variety of reasons to celebrate more than one on the same day. It also became customary for monasteries to ordain most of their monks, though originally monks were almost all laymen, and for every Priest to say a daily Mass. For a while, concelebration, whereby several priests took a full priestly part in offering Mass, provided all with the possibility to celebrate Mass each day, but this custom died out. Low Mass is considered to be a necessity that falls short of the ideal, which is Solemn Mass . ''The Catholic Encyclopedia'' of 1913 describes the result as follows: :... concelebration was in the early Middle Ages replaced by separate private celebrations. No doubt the custom of offering each Mass for a special intention helped to bring about this change. The separate celebrations then involved the building of many altars in one church and the reduction of the ritual to the simplest possible form. The deacon and subdeacon were in this case dispensed with; the celebrant took their part as well as his own. One server took the part of the choir and of all the other ministers, everything was said instead of being sung, the incense and kiss of peace were omitted. So we have the well-known rite of Low Mass (''missa privata''). This then reacted on high Mass (''missa solemnis''), so that at high Mass too the celebrant himself recites everything, even though it be also sung by the deacon, subdeacon, or choir.'' VARIATIONS Originally, Low Mass was sung in monotone. Thus we read of priests in the Middle Ages going to ''sing'' their Missa Privata. This custom died out in the 18th century. In practice Low Mass was said in an inaudible voice between the celebrating Priest and server(s). Thus the name "Missa Privata" came into use. The French and Germans came up with the idea of accompanying Low Mass with music as an aid to the devotion of the faithful, thus giving rise to the French Organ Mass and the Deutsche Singmesse . In the 1920s, the Dialogue Mass came into use (though not universally until the 1950s), enabling the faithful to speak the Latin responses of the Tridentine Mass with the server as well as the parts that they were normally permitted sing at a High Mass , and to recite with the priest the triple "Domine non sum dignus" that he said as part of the rite of Communion of the faithful, which, though not envisaged in the Ordinary Of The Mass until after the Second Vatican Council , could be inserted into the celebration of Mass. It has also come to be used by many Anglo-Catholic parishes within Anglicanism as the normal Mass for weekday services. EXTERNAL LINKS Media
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